Abstract

Abstract Background Few assessment criteria exist for Potentially Inappropriate Medications (PIMs) in the hospital setting. This study aims to develop the preliminary statements of OPTI-3S, criteria for optimising medicines by stopping, stepping down or switching to safer alternatives. These are designed to be of value to clinical practitioners in the routine care of hospitalised, frail older adults. Methods A systematic literature review was conducted in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE and Scopus (2010-2021). Search terms included the concepts of inappropriate prescribing, deprescribing and the target population (e.g. older, frail, hospitalized). This was supplemented with a PubMed focused search (2010-2021) using key words pertaining to the index diseases/conditions or inappropriate medications. The structured reviews included clinical based guidelines, PIMs lists, systematic/non-systematic reviews, or clinical/observational trials that assessed safe and/or effective use of medications in older adults. The preliminary statements were then drafted based on the available relevant evidence. Results Searches yielded ~1500 articles. These were included in structured reviews, yielding a total of 109 initial statements across seven physiological systems, and one patient-centred point of care (perioperative care). In addition to detailed PIMs statements (n=98), 11 statements address clinically important Potential Prescribing Omissions (PPOs) (e.g. anticoagulant underdosing) and altered blood pressure and glycaemic targets. Uniquely for criteria of this kind, 23 statements suggest PIMs be considered based on the different frailty levels, according to the Clinical Frailty Scale. 11/98 PIMs statements concern prescribing cascades and suggest tapering regimens for six inappropriate medication classes (e.g. antipsychotics, benzodiazepines). Several statements address medication appropriateness in other frailty related circumstances (e.g. non-compliance, overlapping co-morbidities, feeding tube incompatibility, pill burden/ polypharmacy). Conclusion Literature provides a large body of evidence to support prescribing optimization. This has been distilled into consensus-based statements, which should guide hospital-based health care professionals caring for frail older adults.

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